My router just died, but through all the sadness and frustration I'm making it through the work day because I planned ahead. I put together a networking emergency kit so I could get up and running again quickly. Here's how you can, too.

First, if we can all take a moment of silence for my wonderful Linksys 310N with DD-WRT. It kept on strong for nearly four good years and was the best router I've ever had. It will be missed.

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When your router dies it is not only frustrating, but it's also confusing. Routers generally don't just shut down one last time and never turn on again. Instead, they start to malfunction. Sometimes you can get them working again for a few hours before the trouble sets in. It's a slow and sad decline that'll take you through many stages of grief. First, there's confusion—you don't know what's happening. Is it the router? The modem? A bad cable? Second, you have denial. You know the router is the problem but you want to believe it's your ISP. They're easy to blame. They screw up all the time. You just got the router working again. It has to be them. But it's not, and you'll realize that soon. Finally, you have acceptance. You know the router is dead. You're going to have to replace it. This isn't a fun realization, but it's necessary. The problem is, replacing a router takes time and money. If you haven't bought one in awhile you need to read up on what to buy. If only you could've diagnosed the problem faster. If only you had some kind of backup to get you online right now. That's what a networking emergency kit is for, and it's pretty easy to put together.

What Goes in the Kit

When you're putting together a networking emergency kit, you really only need a few things:

A backup router that's small and designed to get online quickly, like Apple's Airport Express or the Cisco Valet. You can get something more complex if you prefer, but when you just want to get online again it's kind of nice to avoid a lot of configuration. The Cisco Valet is very inexpensive, too.

Extra ethernet cables. Two or three is good. Cables go bad, too, and sometimes you may need an extra one when configuring your setup. Keep a few handy

Cable testers, like this one or this one. You can find out if you have a bad cable a lot faster with one of these guys, and they're not very expensive ($4-12). It doesn't hurt to have them in your kit.

A small bag or box to hold everything. I use a small first aid kit that I found at Target, but they don't sell it anymore. (It seems to have been replaced by this one.) Soft, padded lunch boxes/bags work well, too. You can also just use some box lying around, but the lunch boxes/bags and first-aid kits have handles, which is nice.

When you get everything together, I highly recommend configuring your router in advance so you don't have to deal with setup or anything else you probably won't want to do in a hurry. That way you can just reset your modem, turn on your router, and get online in a few minutes (if the router is, indeed, the problem). Because I had my kit ready I was able to get back online and write this post. It's a simple thing that takes very little work to put together, and you'll rarely need to use it, but you'll be glad you have it when a problem arises.

Do you have a networking emergency kit? What do you keep in yours? Let us know in the comments.